Jeremy MacClancy teaches social anthropology at Oxford Brookes University, United Kingdom. He has done fieldwork in the South Pacific, Spain, Nigeria and the London auction rooms. He has published widely and broadcasts regularly. His latest books include Popularizing Anthropology and Contesting Art: Art, Politics and Identity in the Modern World.
"This excellent study, both anthropological and historical, examines Carlism since the Civil War, providing a succinct narrative account of its leaders and their rivalries and frustrations as well as its ideological shift from the right to the center-left. Additionally, MacClancy offers remarkable analyses of the use of ceremony in Carlism. . . . This is an important work on a lesser-known aspect of Spain's recent history." --N. Greene, CHOICE, July 2001
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